Greetings after a long but not-so-quiet Pi Day “off-season”! It’s been quite a year, and there are many new stories to tell about the people and particulars of Pi. I hope to impart each of them to you in greater depth here at TeachPi.org soon, but just to share a taste of what’s been happening, here is what I’ve learned since last Pi Day…

An artist in Seattle has been assembling the digits of Pi in 9-inch squares of fabric sent to her by folks around the country and world, and will be unveiling it on Pi Day. She’s surpassed 1,000!

A man in India has been working diligently for the past 26 years to prove to the world that Pi is not actually transcendental, and that the true value of Pi is not 3.1415926…, but rather 3.1464466… Hmm. More on this friendly fellow another time.

A very young girl in Louisiana is poised to take the digit-memory world by storm, having already recited more than 600 digits in – get this – 1st grade! She is in 2nd grade this year, so watch out, kid memorizers at the top of the rankings!

There is an obscure phenomenon known as “self-locating strings” of Pi digits, which I investigated from scratch after receiving a question from a Pi fan. I then briefly thought I had kind of discovered the first few of these strings, but was quickly and appropriately humbled after a chat with a Harvard mathematician friend, who knows a bit more about this, and pretty much everything, than I do!

The 16th root of 90,000,000 is 3.1415. Go figure!

What stories from the last year do you have to share? As our Pi community expands, and reaches an unprecedented peak of visibility on the big 3.14.15, there will undoubtedly be countless new stories of Pi intersecting with our lives, our students, our culture, and our world. Please, by all means, let the storytelling begin! Please send over any stories of Pi in your life, whether on Pi Day or on any other day of the year.

Your Pi pal year-round,

Luke

About the Author

Luke Anderson is the founder and proprietor of TeachPi.org. Luke has been a Pi Day presenter to K-12, college, and adult audiences around the country for more than 15 years, and is a frequent contributor to Pi-related stories in the media.